





ASSOCIATED PRESS
The trust funds for Social Security and Medicare will last a year longer than previously estimated, trustees said yesterday. That means 2041 for the Social Security trust fund to be exhausted and 2019 for Medicare.
In their annual report on the financial health of the government’s two biggest benefit programs, the trustees said that slight reductions in projected benefit payouts and slightly higher tax collections had extended the date that Medicare is projected to be depleted.
For Social Security, the reason for the one-year extension was given as a change in technical assumptions governing how the trust fund will operate in the future.
The trustees said both programs continue to face serious financial problems with the pending retirement of 78 million baby boomers. The report for the first timed triggered a Medicare funding warning that will require President Bush to submit to Congress next year proposals for dealing with Medicare’s problems.
The Medicare funding warning is triggered any time two consecutive trustees reports conclude that the amount of general revenue needed to finance Medicare will top 45 percent of the program’s outlays. The trustees first made that determination last year.
It will require Mr. Bush to propose remedial action early next year. While Congress must consider the proposals, it is not required to act on them.
Lobbying groups for senior citizens have decried the warning mechanism, which was added to Medicare with passage of the prescription drug benefit in 2003.
They contend that it is no more harmful for Medicare to receive more than 45 percent of its funding from general revenue than for other government programs to receive 100 percent funding from general revenue. The other sources of Medicare funding are payroll taxes and insurance premiums.
Mr. Bush once vowed to make overhaul of Social Security the top domestic priority of his second term. However, the proposal he put forward in 2005 to deal with the funding shortfall by creating personal savings accounts for younger workers went nowhere in Congress.
The trustees said that 2017, just a decade from now, is the date that Social Security will begin paying out more in benefits than it collects in payroll taxes.
For Medicare, the date when benefit payouts exceed tax collections is expected to occur this year.
Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., who has engaged in months of talks with members of Congress, said the new report underscored a need for action.
“If we do not take action soon to reform Social Security and Medicare, the coming demographic bulge will jeopardize the programs’ ability to support people who depend on them,” Mr. Paulson said in releasing the report. “Reform is needed and time is of the essence.”
Mr. Paulson is one of three Bush Cabinet members who serve on the six-member panel of trustees for the two benefit programs.
View Entire StoryBy Julia A. Seymour
Planned Parenthood flap preceded by assault from anti-chemical activists

By Rich Campbell - The Washington Times
updated 0 minutes ago
Imagine this: Peyton Manning coming out of the tunnel at FedEx Field this September, poised ...

By Rowan Scarborough - The Washington Times
When Lt. j.g. Timothy W. Dorsey fired his fighter jet’s missile at an Air Force ...
By Paige Winfield Cunningham - The Washington Times
Pointing to growing unease that President Obama’s proposed contraception coverage rule doesn’t protect religious freedom ...
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

An inside look at the world highlighting not only green issues affecting us all, but everything from green travel to green technology.

Join us for an extraordinary adventure through the San Francisco Bay Area.

Find up-to-date information on the D.C. and Baltimore live music scenes and read interviews with artists and reviews of the latest releases and concerts.